Elizabeth Eiloart

Elizabeth Eiloart
BornElizabeth Darby Adams
1827
St. Pancras, London
Died22 February 1898
Brighton, England
Pen nameMrs. C. J. Eiloart
OccupationAuthor and suffragist

Elizabeth Eiloart (1827 โ€“ 22 February 1898)[1] was an English novelist, who wrote mostly children's fiction under the name Mrs. C. J. Eiloart. She was also a feminist and suffragist.

Life

Eiloart was born Elizabeth Darby Adams in 1827[2] in St. Pancras, London,[3] the daughter of Samuel Adams. On 29 September 1849, she married Carl J. G. Eiloart at St Pancras Old Church[4] where they made their home. They had twelve children, five of whom died as children. The survivors were Edith, Ernest, Bernard, Clarence, Arnold, and Blanche.[2] Ernest Eiloart wrote The Laws Relating to Women in 1878.[5] Around 1890, the couple retired to Dane Street in St Leonards-on-Sea[5] where they lived until Carl's death. Elizabeth died on 22 February 1898 in Brighton.[1]

Feminist activities

In 1858, she persuaded Marylebone Swimming Baths to be open for ladies each Wednesday. She was a shareholder in and writer for the English Woman's Journal from its foundation in 1858, and became its editor in 1864.[6]

Published works

Source:[5]

  • Ernie Elton, the Lazy Boy (1865, new ed. 1876)
  • Ernie Elton at School: and What Came of His Going There (1866)
  • Ernie Elton at Home and at School (1866)
  • Johnny Jordan and His Dog (1866)
  • Archie Blake: a Sea-side Story (1867, new ed. 1878)
  • The Boys of Beechwood Illustrated (1867)
  • The Curate's Discipline (1867)
  • Tom Dunstone's Troubles, and How He Got Over Them (1869)
  • From Thistles--Grapes? (1870)
  • Cris Fairlie's Boyhood: a Tale (1870)
  • St. Bede's (1870)
  • Just a Woman (1871)
  • The Young Squire: or, Peter and His Friends (1872)
  • Woman's Wrong (1872)
  • Lady Moretoun's Daughter (1873)
  • A Boy With an Idea Illustrated (1873, new ed. 1881)
  • Love That Lived: a Novel (1874)
  • Some of Our Girls (1875, new ed. 1884)
  • Kate Randal's Bargain: a Novel (1875)
  • Jabez Ebsleigh, M.P.: a Novel (1876)
  • His Second Wife: a Novel (1877)
  • How He Won Her (1879, new ed. 1883)
  • The Dean's Wife (1880, new ed. 1883)
  • My Lady Clare (1882)
  • Was it Worth the Cost?: a Novel (1883)
  • Out of Her Sphere (Bentley, 1872)

Reception of works

Ernie Elton still proved popular amongst school children twenty years after original publication.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b Grassick Family Tree & Other Related Families, Ancestry.com.
  2. ^ a b victorianresearch.org Elizabeth Darby Eiloart
  3. ^ "'England and Wales Census, 1871,' index and images: Elizabeth D Eiloart in entry for Carl J G Eiloart, 1871". FamilySearch. Retrieved 15 February 2013.
  4. ^ "Carl Julius Gozna Eiloart and Elizabeth Darby Adams". England Marriages, 1538โ€“1973, citing Old Church, Saint Pancras, London, England, FHL microfilm 598341, 598342, 598343, 598344, 598345, 598346, 598347, 598348. FamilySearch. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
  5. ^ a b c Kirk, John Foster (1891). A Supplement to Allibone's Critical Dictionary of English Literature. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. pp. 545.
  6. ^ "British Women's Emancipation since the Renaissance".
  7. ^ Jordan, John O.; Patten, Robert L. (2003). Literature in the Marketplace: Nineteenth-Century British Publishing and Reading Practices. Cambridge University Press. pp. 196โ€“198. ISBN 9780521893930. Retrieved 9 July 2015.